home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
- More essays can always be found at:
- --- http://www.CheatHouse.com ---
- ... and contact can always be made to:
- Webmaster@cheathouse.com
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Essay Name : 1178.txt
- Uploader : Anonymous
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Computer
- Title : A Brief History of Library Automation: 1930-1996
- Grade : A
- School System : UMCP (don't use it at this University *dangerous*)
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : About 5 pages, you could stretch it to 6-7 with larger font
- Teacher Comments : Good
- Date : November, 1996
- Site found at : Bookmarked at friend's house
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- An automated library is one where a computer system is used to
- manage one or several of the library's key functions such as
- acquisitions, serials control, cataloging, circulation and the public
- access catalog. When exploring the history of library automation, it
- is possible to return to past centuries when visionaries well before
- the computer age created devices to assist with their book lending
- systems. Even as far back as 1588, the invention of the French "Book
- Wheel" allowed scholars to rotate between books by stepping on a pedal
- that turned a book table. Another interesting example was the "Book
- Indicator", developed by Albert Cotgreave in 1863. It housed miniature
- books to represent books in the library's collection. The miniature
- books were part of a design that made it possible to determine if a
- book was in, out or overdue. These and many more examples of early
- ingenuity in library systems exist, however, this paper will focus on
- the more recent computer automation beginning in the early twentieth
- century.
-
- The Beginnings of Library Automation: 1930-1960
- It could be said that library automation development began in the
- 1930's when punch card equipment was implemented for use in library
- circulation and acquisitions. During the 30's and early 40's progress
- on computer systems was slow which is not surprising, given the
- Depression and World War II. In 1945, Vannevar Bush envisioned an
- automated system that would store information, including books,
- personal records and articles. Bush(1945) wrote about a hypothetical
- "memex" system which he described as a mechanical library that would
- allow a user to view stored information from several different access
- points and look at several items simultaneously. His ideas are well
- known as the basis for hypertext and mputers for their operations. The
- first appeared at MIT, in 1957, with the development of COMIT,
- managing linguistic computations, natural language and the ability to
- search for a particular string of information. Librarians then moved
- beyond a vision or idea for the use of computers, given the
- technology, they were able make great advances in the use of computers
- for library systems. This lead to an explosion of library automation
- in the 60's and 70's.
-
- Library Automation Officially is Underway: 1960-1980
- The advancement of technology lead to increases in the use of
- computers in libraries. In 1961, a significant invention by both
- Robert Noyce of Intel and Jack Kirby of Texas Instruments, working
- independently, was the integrated circuit. All the components of an
- electronic circuit were placed onto a single "chip" of silicon. This
- invention of the integrated circuit and newly developed disk and tape
- storage devices gave computers the speed, storage and ability needed
- for on-line interactive processing and telecommunications.
- The new potential for computer use guided one librarian to develop a
- new indexing technique. HP. Luhn, in 1961, used a computer to produce
- the "keyword in context" or KWIC index for articles appearing in
- Chemical Abstracts. Although keyword indexing was not new, it was
- found to be very suitable for the computer as it was inexpensive and
- it presented multiple access points. Through the use of Luhn's keyword
- indexing, it was found that librarians had the ability to put
- controlled language index terms on the computer.
- By the mid-60's, computers were being used for the production of
- machine readable catalog records by the Library of Congress. Between
- 1965 and 1968, LOC began the MARC I project, followed quickly by MARC
- II. MARC was designed as way of "tagging" bibliographic records using
- 3-digit numbers to identify fields. For example, a tag might indicate
- "ISBN," while another tag indicates "publication date," and yet
- another indicates "Library of Congress subject headings" and so on. In
- 1974, the MARC II format became the basis of a standard incorporated
- by NISO (National Information Standards Organization). This was a
- significant development because the standards created meant that a
- bibliographic record could be read and transferred by the computer
- between different library systems.
- ARPANET, a network established by the Defense Advanced Research
- Projects Agency in 1969 brought into existence the use of e-mail,
- telnet and ftp. By 1980, a sub-net of ARPANET made MELVYL, the
- University of Californiaφs on-line public access catalog, available on
- a national level. ARPANET, would become the prototype for other
- networks such as CSNET, BITNET, and EDUCOM. These networks have almost
- disappeared with the evolution of ARPANET to NSFNET which has become
- the present day Internet.
- During the 1970's the inventions of the integrated computer chip
- and storage devices caused the use of minicomputers and microcomputers
- to grow substantially. The use of commercial systems for searching
- reference databases (such as DIALOG) began. BALLOTS (Bibliographical
- Automation of Large Library Operations) in the late 1970's was one of
- the first and later became the foundation for RLIN (the Research
- Libraries Information Network). BALLOTS was designed to integrate
- closely with the technical processing functions of the library and
- contained four main files: (1)MARC records from LOC; (2) an in-process
- file containing information on items in the processing stage; (3) a
- catalog data file containing an on-line record for each item; and (4)
- a reference file. Further, it contained a wide search retrieval
- capability with the ability to search on truncated words, keywords,
- and LC subject headings, for example.
- OCLC, the On-line Computer Library Center began in 1967, chartered in
- the state of Ohio. This significant project facilitated technical
- processing in library systems when it started it's first cooperative
- cataloging venture in 1970. It went on-line in 1971. Since that time
- it has grown considerably, providing research and utihypermedia.
- In order to have automation, there must first be a computer. The
- development of the computer progressed substantially from 1946 to
- 1961, moving quickly though a succession of vacuum tubes, transistors
- and finally to silicon chips. From 1946 to 1947 two significant
- computers were built. The ENIAC I (Electronic Numerical Integrator and
- Calculator) computer was developed by John Mauchly and J. Presper
- Eckert at the University of Pennsylvania. It contained over 18,000
- vacuum tubes, weighed thirty tons and was housed in two stories of a
- building. It was intended for use during World War II but was not
- completed in time. Instead, it was used to assist the development of
- the hydrogen bomb. Another computer, EDVAC, was designed to store two
- programs at once and switch between the sets of instructions. A major
- breakthrough occurred in 1947 when Bell Laboratories replaced vacuum
- tubes with the invention of the transistor. The transistors decreased
- the size of the computer, and at the same time increased the speed and
- capacity. The UNIVAC I (Universal Automatic Computer) became the
- first computer using transistors and was used at the U.S. Bureau of
- the Census from 1951 until 1963.
- Software development also was in progress during this time.
- Operating systems and programming languages were developed for the
- computers being built. Librarians needed text-based computer
- languages, different from the first numerical languages invented for
- the number crunching "monster computers", in order to be able to use
- colities designed to provide users with the ability to access
- bibliographic records, scientific and literary information which
- continues to the present .
-
- Library Automation 1980-present
- The 70's were the era of the dummy terminal that were used to gain
- access to mainframe on-line databases. The 80's gave birth to a new
- revolution. The size of computers decreased, at the same time,
- technology provided faster chips, additional RAM and greater storage
- capacity. The use of microcomputers during the 1980's expanded
- tremendously into the homes, schools, libraries and offices of many
- Americans. The microcomputer of the 80's became a useful tool for
- librarians who put to them to use for everything from word processing
- to reference, circulation and serials.
- On-line Public Access Catalogs began to be used extensively the
- 1980's. Libraries started to set-up and purchase their own computer
- systems as well as connect with other established library networks.
- Many of these were not developed by the librarians themselves, but by
- vendors who supplied libraries with systems for everything from
- cataloging to circulation. One such on-line catalog system is the CARL
- (Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries) system. Various other
- software became available to librarians, such as spreadsheets and
- databases for help in library administration and information
- dissemination.
- The introduction of CD-ROMs in the late 80φs has changed the way
- libraries operate. CD-ROMs became available containing databases,
- software, and information previously only available through print,
- making the information more accessible. Connections to "outside"
- databases such as OCLC, DIALOG, and RLIN continued, however, in the
- early 90's the databases that were previously available on-line became
- available on CD-ROM, either in parts or in their entirety. Libraries
- could then gain information through a variety of options.
- The nineties are giving rise to yet another era in library
- automation. The use of networks for e-mail, ftp, telnet, Internet, and
- connections to on-line commercial systems has grown. It is now
- possible for users to connect to the libraries from their home or
- office. The world wide web which had it's official start date as
- April of 1993 is becoming the fastest growing new provider of
- information. It is also possible, to connect to international library
- systems and information through the Internet and with ever improving
- telecommunications. Expert systems and knowledge systems have become
- available in the 90φs as both software and hardware capabilities have
- improved. The technology used for the processing of information has
- grown considerably since the beginnings of the thirty ton computer.
- With the development of more advanced silicon computer chips, enlarged
- storage space and faster, increased capacity telecommunication lines,
- the ability to quickly process, store, send and retrieve information
- is causing the current information delivery services to flourish.
-
-
- Bibliography
-
- Bush, V. (1945).As we may think. Atlantic Monthly. 176(1), 101-8.
-
- Duval, B.K. & Main, L. (1992). Automated Library Systems: A Librarians
- Guide and Teaching Manual. London: Meckler
-
- Nelson, N.M., (Ed.) (1990). Library Technology 1970-1990: Shaping the
- Library of the Future. Research Contributions from the 1990 Computers
- in Libraries Conference. London: Meckler.
-
- Pitkin, G.M. (Ed.) (1991). The Evolution of Library Automation:
- Management Issues and Future Perspectives. London: Meckler.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Title:
- A Brief History of Library Automation: 1930-1996
-
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-